Mountain
Bikers Are Cautioned To Ride With Care, Major Injuries Do
Happen
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Bikes & Cycles From BiGFitNESS - Sean
Toh
Take
Care Where Mountain Biking
Mountain biking is considered a relatively safe sport,
as accidents typically result in minor injuries.
However, over the past 25 years, the sport has grown
from a pastime to an Olympic sport, and major injuries
are becoming more prevalent. In an article from The
American Journal of Sports Medicine published by SAGE
Publications, three mountain biking injury cases that
resulted in acute cervical spine injuries resulting in
tetraplegia, commonly called quadriplegia, are
reported. Previously published research on this
subject have commonly only noted serious neck
injuries, and no detailed reports have been made on
cervical spinal cord injuries in English literature.
In each of the three cases, male mountain bikers,
ranging in age from 38 to 53 years old, were severely
injured. In all the three cases, the bikers reportedly
fell over the handlebars, and the helmet was the first
to receive the impact of the fall. In the first case,
the biker's front wheel came off during a downhill
ride, and in the second case, there was a lack of
hazard warnings on the trail--both potentially
preventable causes. The severe impact of the accidents
resulted in damage to the helmets (in one case, the
impact of the fall caused the biker's helmet to split
into two pieces). All three mountain bikers lost the
ability to move their limbs. Although a CT or MRI scan
ultimately showed the severe cervical spine injuries,
in one case the diagnosis was initially overlooked.
This was possibly due to the incoherent state of the
injured biker that resulted from a head injury. The
authors reported that as cerebral concussions are not
uncommon in mountain biking injuries, a spinal injury
must be assumed in an injured biker with abnormal
mental status until proven otherwise.
The authors conclude that preventable causes of
mountain biking accidents can result in serious
cervical spine injuries. It is essential that medical
teams attending to the injuries are aware of this and
take proper precautionary steps to diagnose these
injuries. When no injuries are found on radiographs, a
CT and/or MRI scan may be useful in further diagnosis.
By sciencedaily.com
2006 (c) creditplushealth.com
Credit Plus Health By Sean Toh All rights reserved.